Com. v. Prizzia, S. ( 2021 )


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  • J-A13006-21
    
    2021 PA Super 172
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA                 :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    SHAWN PRIZZIA                                :
    :
    Appellant               :   No. 1897 EDA 2020
    Appeal from the Judgment of Sentence Entered September 22, 2020
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County Criminal Division at
    No(s): CP-45-CR-0000806-2019
    BEFORE:      BENDER, P.J.E., DUBOW, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    OPINION BY BENDER, P.J.E.:                          FILED AUGUST 24, 2021
    Appellant, Shawn Prizzia, appeals from the judgment of sentence of an
    aggregate term of incarceration of 90 days’ to two years’ less one day,
    imposed after she was convicted of driving under the influence of a controlled
    substance     (“DUI-Controlled      Substance”),   75   Pa.C.S.   §   3802(a)(1)(i),
    possession of a controlled substance, 35 P.S. § 780-113(a)(16), improper sun
    screening on a vehicle (“window-tint violation”), 75 Pa.C.S. § 4524(e)(1), and
    related charges. On appeal, Appellant challenges the trial court’s denial of her
    pretrial motion to suppress, in which she contended, inter alia, that the stop
    of her vehicle was illegal. After careful review, we affirm.
    ____________________________________________
    * Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A13006-21
    In the trial court’s opinion accompanying its order denying Appellant’s
    motion to suppress, it summarized the facts leading to the stop of Appellant’s
    vehicle as follows:
    On November 28, 2018, Trooper Anthony Spegar of the
    Pennsylvania State Police was on routine patrol in East
    Stroudsburg Borough, Monroe County. While on patrol, Trooper
    Spegar observed a vehicle on the road with “windows tinted to the
    degree that [he] could not see the operator inside the vehicle.”
    Notes of Testimony [(“N.T.”)] … Hearing, 08/13/19, [at] 7….
    Trooper Spegar testified that prior to initiating a traffic stop, he
    followed [Appellant’s] white Scion TC for a period of time and at
    no distance could he see through the “side, front, [or] passenger
    windows.” [Id. at] 7-9. Trooper Spegar further testified that in
    his experience as a Pennsylvania State Trooper, he is aware that
    at the distances from which he observed [Appellant’s] vehicle prior
    to conducting a traffic stop, manufacturer-installed tint would not
    render the windows too dark to see through. [Id. at] 9-10. Based
    on his observations, Trooper Spegar conducted a traffic stop of
    [Appellant’s] vehicle based on illegal window tint. [Id. at] 10.
    See Trial Court Opinion (“TCO”), 12/9/19, at 1-2.
    During the course of Appellant’s traffic stop, Trooper Spegar discovered
    narcotics and paraphernalia in the car and in Appellant’s purse. Appellant also
    exhibited signs that she was impaired on narcotics, including constricted
    pupils, heavy breathing, shaking hands, and rapid, slurred, and incoherent
    speech.    Field sobriety and blood tests were subsequently conducted, the
    results of which demonstrated that Appellant was driving while impaired by a
    controlled substance.1
    ____________________________________________
    1 The court provided a detailed summary of what transpired during the stop
    of Appellant’s vehicle that led to her arrest and conviction for DUI, possession
    of a controlled substance, and related offenses. See TCO at 2-7.
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    J-A13006-21
    Appellant was arrested and charged with DUI-Controlled Substance,
    possession of a controlled substance, a window-tint violation, and related
    offenses. Prior to trial, she filed a motion to suppress, arguing, inter alia, that
    Trooper Spegar’s stop of her vehicle was illegal. After a hearing, the court
    issued an order and accompanying opinion denying Appellant’s motion. She
    filed a motion for reconsideration, which the court denied.        Her case then
    proceeded to a non-jury trial on June 23, 2020. At the close thereof, the court
    convicted Appellant of all charges and, on September 22, 2020, it sentenced
    her to the aggregate term stated supra.
    Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal, and she complied with the trial
    court’s order to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement of errors
    complained of on appeal. The court thereafter filed a Rule 1925(a) opinion,
    stating that it was relying on the rationale set forth in its December 9, 2019
    opinion accompanying the order denying Appellant’s motion to suppress.
    Herein, Appellant states two issues for our review:
    1. Whether the evidence against … Appellant should have been
    suppressed where police conducted the stop for window tint,
    where tint placed by a manufacturer is not illegal under 75
    Pa.C.S.[] § 4524(e), and where police testified to no investigation,
    knowledge, training, or experience on whether the particular tint
    was placed by a manufacturer?
    2. Whether the lower court erroneously determined that the
    duration of the stop was not raised as an issue where Appellant
    challenged the lawfulness of the stop in her motion and argued
    the duration was unlawful in her brief?
    Appellant’s Brief at 4.
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    J-A13006-21
    Appellant’s first issue challenges the court’s denial of her motion to
    suppress based on the alleged illegality of the stop of her vehicle.
    Preliminarily, we note that,
    [a]n appellate court’s standard of review in addressing a challenge
    to the denial of a suppression motion is limited to determining
    whether the suppression court’s factual findings are supported by
    the record and whether the legal conclusions drawn from those
    facts are correct. Because the Commonwealth prevailed before
    the suppression court, we may consider only the evidence of the
    Commonwealth and so much of the evidence for the defense as
    remains uncontradicted when read in the context of the record as
    a whole. Where the suppression court’s factual findings are
    supported by the record, the appellate court is bound by those
    findings and may reverse only if the court’s legal conclusions are
    erroneous.     Where the appeal of the determination of the
    suppression court turns on allegations of legal error, the
    suppression court’s legal conclusions are not binding on an
    appellate court, whose duty it is to determine if the suppression
    court properly applied the law to the facts. Thus, the conclusions
    of law of the courts below are subject to plenary review.
    Commonwealth v. Smith, 
    164 A.3d 1255
    , 1257 (Pa. Super. 2017) (cleaned
    up).
    Here, it is uncontradicted that Trooper Spegar stopped Appellant’s
    vehicle for a window-tint violation under 75 Pa.C.S. § 4524(e)(1). Section
    4524(e) states, in pertinent part:
    (e) Sun screening and other materials prohibited.--
    (1) No person shall drive any motor vehicle with any sun screening
    device or other material which does not permit a person to see or
    view the inside of the vehicle through the windshield, side wing or
    side window of the vehicle.
    (2) This subsection does not apply to:
    (i) A vehicle which is equipped with tinted windows of the
    type and specification that were installed by the
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    manufacturer of the vehicle or to any hearse, ambulance,
    government vehicle or any other vehicle for which a
    currently valid certificate of exemption has been issued in
    accordance with regulations adopted by the department.
    (ii) A vehicle which is equipped with tinted windows, sun
    screening devices or other materials which comply with all
    applicable Federal regulations and for which a currently valid
    certificate of exemption for medical reasons has been issued
    in accordance with regulations adopted by the department.
    75 Pa.C.S. § 4524(e)(1), (e)(2)(i)-(ii).
    Before    examining   Appellant’s    challenges   to   Trooper      Spegar’s
    observations regarding the illegality of the window tint on her vehicle, we must
    address her claim that “this Court has issued conflicting opinions on whether
    the law requires reasonable suspicion or probable cause” to justify a vehicle
    stop based solely on a violation of section 4524(e)(1). Appellant’s Brief at 16.
    According to Appellant, this Court applied a reasonable-suspicion standard to
    this type of stop in Commonwealth v. Postie, 
    110 A.3d 1034
     (Pa. Super.
    2015), yet later used a probable-cause standard to assess the legality of the
    same type of traffic stop in Commonwealth v. Harris, 
    176 A.3d 1009
     (Pa.
    Super. 2017).
    We disagree with Appellant that Postie and Harris are irreconcilable.
    First, as we noted in Harris, “[t]he issue of what quantum of cause a police
    officer must possess in order to conduct a vehicle stop based on a possible
    violation of the Motor Vehicle Code is a question of law, over which our scope
    of review is plenary and our standard of review is de novo.” Harris, 
    176 A.3d at
    1019 n.3 (citation omitted). We further recognized in Harris that,
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    [o]ur analysis of the quantum of cause required for a traffic stop
    begins with 75 Pa.C.S.[] § 6308(b), which provides:
    (b) Authority of police officer.—Whenever a police officer
    is engaged in a systematic program of checking vehicles or
    drivers or has reasonable suspicion that a violation of this
    title is occurring or has occurred, he may stop a vehicle,
    upon request or signal, for the purpose of checking the
    vehicle’s registration, proof of financial responsibility,
    vehicle identification number or engine number or the
    driver’s license, or to secure such other information as the
    officer may reasonably believe to be necessary to enforce
    the provisions of this title.
    75 Pa.C.S.[] § 6308(b) (bold in original).
    “Traffic stops based on a reasonable suspicion: either of criminal
    activity or a violation of the Motor Vehicle Code under the
    authority of Section 6308(b) must serve a stated investigatory
    purpose.” Commonwealth v. Feczko, 
    10 A.3d 1285
    , 1291 (Pa.
    Super. 2010) (en banc) (citation omitted). For a stop based on
    the observed violation of the Vehicle Code or otherwise non-
    investigable offense, an officer must have probable cause to make
    a constitutional vehicle stop. [Id.] … (“Mere reasonable suspicion
    will not justify a vehicle stop when the driver’s detention cannot
    serve an investigatory purpose relevant to the suspected
    violation.”). Pennsylvania law makes clear that a police officer
    has probable cause to stop a motor vehicle if the officer observes
    a traffic code violation, even if it is a minor offense.
    Commonwealth v. Chase, … 
    960 A.2d 108
     ([Pa.] 2008).
    
    Id.
    In Postie, we did not acknowledge Feczko’s holding regarding what
    quantum of cause will support a traffic stop. Instead, we simply set forth the
    reasonable-suspicion language of 75 Pa.C.S. § 6308(b) and other law
    regarding reasonable suspicion to conduct a traffic stop. Postie, 110 A.3d at
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    1039-40. We then explained that the stop of Postie’s vehicle was lawful for
    the following reasons:
    In denying [the a]ppellant’s suppression motion, the trial court
    held:
    I find credible [the trooper’s] testimony that he could not
    see through the rear window and that he believed the tint
    to be so dark that it was in violation of the inspection code.
    Furthermore, [the trooper] had seen this same vehicle
    before and issued the driver a warning to have the tint
    removed. Upon seeing it a second time in the same
    condition, [the trooper] likely had probable cause to pull
    the vehicle over.
    Order, 10/15/12, at 2 n.1….
    In light of the trial court’s specific finding that [the trooper’s]
    testimony was credible, we find no abuse of discretion in its
    holding that the trooper stated specific observations and properly
    concluded that criminal activity was afoot. The trooper clearly
    testified [that,] several months earlier, he issued a warning to the
    driver of the vehicle to remove the tint on the windows, and on
    the day in question, observed the same vehicle with windows dark
    enough that he could not see through them. Furthermore, we find
    no merit to [the a]ppellant’s argument that he was not issued a
    citation for tinted windows, as the law does not require a violation
    to be established. Accordingly, we do not disturb the trial court’s
    suppression order.
    Id. at 1040 (footnote, internal citation, and some emphasis omitted; bolded
    emphasis added). Clearly, the trial court in Postie applied a probable cause
    standard to the vehicle stop, and this Court adopted that analysis in affirming
    the order denying suppression. Thus, it appears that the Postie panel actually
    applied a probable cause assessment to the traffic stop, despite setting forth
    law regarding reasonable suspicion.
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    J-A13006-21
    In Harris, we similarly concluded that the stopping officer was required
    to possess probable cause to pull over Harris’s vehicle for a window-tint
    violation. There, the officer testified that the window tint on Harris’s vehicle
    was “extremely dark[,]” and “covered all of the vehicle’s side windows,” such
    that the officer “could not see inside the vehicle through the passenger side”
    to even “determine whether a male or female was driving the vehicle.”
    Harris, 
    176 A.3d at 1013
    . Because the windows were so dark that the officer
    could not see inside the vehicle at all, and no further investigation was
    necessary for the officer to discern that the vehicle’s window tint violated
    section 4524(e)(1), we found that the officer was required to have probable
    cause to stop Harris’s car. 
    Id. at 1019
     (“Since an investigation following the
    traffic stop would have provided [the o]fficer … with no additional information
    as to whether [Harris] violated [s]ection 4524(e), probable cause was
    necessary to initiate the stop on this basis.”) (citing Feczko, 
    supra).
    We do not discern a conflict between Postie and Harris. The Postie
    panel adopted the trial court’s probable-cause assessment in affirming the
    order denying suppression, and the Harris panel also applied a probable-
    cause standard to determine if the stop in that case was lawful.
    Here, the trial court found that “Trooper Spegar credibly testified that
    the basis for the traffic stop was that he ‘observed a vehicle traveling in front
    of [him] with windows tinted to a degree that [he] could not see the operator
    inside the vehicle.’” TCO at 11-12 (quoting N.T. Hearing at 7). The trooper
    added “that[,] in his training and experience, he is able to see inside vehicles
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    with manufacturer tint at the same distances and angles he viewed
    [Appellant’s] vehicle prior to initiating the traffic stop.” 
    Id.
     at 12 (citing N.T.
    Hearing at 9-10).       As in Postie and Harris, the facts demonstrate that
    Trooper Spegar could discern, from his initial observation of Appellant’s
    vehicle, that her window tint violated section 4524(e)(1) because the trooper
    could not see into her car. Trooper Spegar did not state that his stopping
    Appellant’s vehicle served any investigable purpose. Thus, he was required
    to possess probable cause to conduct the traffic stop for the section
    4524(e)(1) violation.2
    ____________________________________________
    2  We reject the Commonwealth’s argument that a reasonable suspicion
    standard must be applied to a stop for a window-tint violation under section
    4524(e)(1). In support of this position, the Commonwealth relies on the
    following footnote in Commonwealth v. Cartagena, 
    63 A.3d 294
     (Pa. Super.
    2013) (en banc):
    There is no measurable amount of tint that renders a vehicle with
    tinted windows illegal in Pennsylvania. Tint is illegal if, from the
    point of view of the officer, he or she is unable to see inside of a
    vehicle through the windshield, side wing, or side window. See 75
    Pa.C.S.[] § 4524(e)(1); supra n.2. There is no legislative history
    surrounding the passage of [s]ection 4524 to elucidate the reason
    for this subjective standard. Furthermore, police are oftentimes
    making the initial determination of reasonable suspicion to
    suspect illegal tint from a distance of several car lengths away and
    at night, as were the circumstances in this case. See
    N.T., 8/18/10, at 4, 7. Thus, it is important in an analysis of the
    totality of the circumstances to view the presence of the tinted
    windows in the context of the officer’s training and experience with
    stops involving tinted windows, as well as other factors.
    Id. at 305 n.26 (emphasis added).
    The Cartagena panel’s brief reference to reasonable suspicion, in a
    footnote of a decision not specifically addressing what quantum of cause
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    Appellant contends that Trooper Spegar lacked probable cause to stop
    her because “he acknowledged that he did not know the manufacturer tint on
    the make and model” of Appellant’s vehicle. Appellant’s Brief at 20 (emphasis
    omitted). She insists that the trooper merely “offered an unjustified inference
    that if the window was too dark to see through, then it must not be
    manufacturer tint. But the statute itself presumes that there will be situations
    in which the manufacturer tint is too dark to see through.” Id. According to
    Appellant, because Trooper Spegar’s testimony failed to establish that he was
    correct that her window-tint was not manufacturer applied when he stopped
    her car, the stop was illegal.
    Appellant’s argument is meritless.          Trooper Spegar testified that the
    windows on Appellant’s vehicle were so darkly tinted that he could not see
    inside.   This testimony was corroborated by still photographs entered into
    evidence at the suppression hearing, which showed that “at certain angles,
    ____________________________________________
    applies to a vehicle stop for a window-tint violation, does not convince us that
    a reasonable suspicion standard must apply to all such stops. Instead, in our
    view, the appropriate quantum of cause necessary to validate a traffic stop
    based on a violation of section 4524(e)(1) is dependent on the specific facts
    of each case. In some situations (like Postie, Harris, and the present case),
    a probable cause standard will apply because the officer’s testimony
    establishes that a window-tint violation was immediately apparent to the
    officer, and no further investigatory purpose was served by the traffic stop.
    In other cases (like Cartagena), a reasonable suspicion standard could apply
    because the officer’s testimony demonstrates that he or she stopped the
    vehicle to get a closer and/or unobstructed view of the windows, in further
    investigation of whether the tint violates section 4524(e)(1). Accordingly, our
    decision today should not be read as precluding application of a reasonable
    suspicion standard to a stop for a window-tint violation, if the specific facts of
    the case demonstrate that an investigatory purpose was served by the stop.
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    J-A13006-21
    the side panel windows on [Appellant’s] car [were], indeed, darkly tinted to a
    degree that seeing through [the] same [was] difficult, if not impossible.” TCO
    at 12 (citation omitted). Trooper Spegar’s testimony, and the corroborating
    evidence, demonstrated that the trooper could not see through Appellant’s
    windows, thus establishing probable cause to stop her vehicle for a violation
    of section 4524(e)(1). See Harris, 
    supra.
    The trooper’s additional testimony that, in his experience, car
    manufacturers do not install tint as dark as that on Appellant’s windows was
    unnecessary to establishing probable cause to conduct the stop.              Under
    section 4524(e)(1), “[t]int is illegal if, from the point of view of the officer, he
    or she is unable to see inside of a vehicle through the windshield, side wing,
    or side window.” Cartagena, 62 A.3d at 305 (citations omitted). Section
    4524(e)(2) sets forth exceptions, or affirmative defenses, to criminal
    culpability for a violation of (e)(1), which are the defendant’s burden to prove.
    See Commonwealth v. Rodriguez, 
    81 A.3d 103
    , 106 (Pa. Super. 2013)
    (finding that Rodriguez failed to prove that he was entitled to application of
    the manufacturer-tint exception because he “presented no argument or
    evidence related to the installation of tinted windows in his vehicle”).
    Thus, an officer who observes a window-tint violation under section
    4524(e)(1) has no burden to confirm that an (e)(2) exception does not apply
    before he or she has probable cause to stop the vehicle. Rather, to possess
    probable cause that a vehicle is in violation of section 4524(e)(1), an officer
    must only observe that the tint on the vehicle’s windows is so dark that it
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    prohibits the officer from seeing inside the car. See Harris, 
    176 A.3d at 1019
    .
    Trooper Spegar’s testimony established that he had probable cause to stop
    Appellant’s vehicle because her window tint prevented him from seeing inside
    the car.    His additional testimony that he believed, before he stopped
    Appellant’s vehicle, that the manufacturer had not installed the tint on her
    vehicle was superfluous.      As such, Appellant’s challenge to the trooper’s
    testimony on this point does not establish that the stop of her vehicle was
    illegal. Her first issue is meritless.
    In Appellant’s second issue, she claims that Trooper Spegar’s stop of
    her vehicle was unlawfully prolonged and, therefore, the court should have
    granted her motion to suppress the evidence obtained during the course of
    the stop. The trial court deemed Appellant’s challenge to the duration of the
    stop waived based on her failure to specifically raise it in her motion to
    suppress. In response, Appellant contends that her attack on the duration of
    the stop was encompassed within her challenge to the legality of the stop in
    general. She also asserts that she argued the stop was unlawfully prolonged
    in a brief she filed to support her motion to suppress. See Appellant’s Brief
    at 22 (citing Omnibus Brief, 9/4/19, at 9, 11).
    Our review of the record confirms that at no point in her motion to
    suppress, or amendment thereto, did Appellant specifically state she was
    challenging the duration of the stop. While in her pre-hearing brief, she cited
    case law pertaining to the duration of a traffic stop, see Omnibus Brief at 9,
    Appellant made no effort to discuss how that law applied to the specific facts
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    of her case, or raise any particular argument regarding why the duration of
    the stop of her vehicle allegedly rendered it illegal. She also does not cite to
    where she raised any such argument at the suppression hearing. Instead,
    Appellant only specifically asserted a challenge to the duration of the stop in
    her motion for reconsideration filed after the court issued its order denying
    her motion to suppress.3 Accordingly, we agree with trial court that Appellant
    waived this claim for our review. See Commonwealth v. Freeman, 
    128 A.3d 1231
    , 1241 (Pa. Super. 2015) (stating that suppression motions “must
    be made with specificity and particularity as to the evidence sought to be
    suppressed and the reasons for the suppression”) (citation omitted); see also
    Commonwealth v. McDonald, 
    881 A.2d 858
    , 860 (Pa. 2005) (the
    Commonwealth’s burden to establish that the challenged evidence was legally
    ____________________________________________
    3 Appellant’s raising this issue for the first time after the court denied her
    suppression motion makes her case distinguishable from the two cases on
    which she relies, Commonwealth v. Stoops, 
    723 A.2d 184
    , 188 (Pa. Super.
    1998) (finding a suppression issue preserved where it was raised in the
    defendant’s post-hearing brief (filed before the court denied the motion), the
    Commonwealth did not object to the defendant’s raising of the claim in this
    fashion, and an evidentiary record had been adequately developed on the
    issue), and Commonwealth v. Carper, 
    172 A.3d 613
    , 620 (Pa. Super. 2017)
    (finding no waiver where Carper raised the claim for the first time in his post-
    hearing brief, the Commonwealth did not object, and the court had an
    adequate opportunity to consider the issue, in light of the facts developed at
    the suppression hearing, before ruling on Carper’s motion). In both Stoops
    and Carper, the defendants raised their specific claims before the court ruled
    on their motions to suppress, thereby providing the Commonwealth an
    opportunity to object (which it did not) and the court the ability to consider
    the claim in ruling on the motion. Here, in contrast, Appellant waited until
    after the court had denied her motion to suppress to specifically assert her
    challenge to the duration of the stop. Accordingly, Stoops and Carper do not
    apply.
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    obtained is triggered only when the defendant “state[s] specifically and with
    particularity the evidence sought to be suppressed, the grounds for
    suppression, and the facts and events in support thereof”).
    In any event, even if not waived, we would conclude that Appellant’s
    challenge to the duration of the traffic stop is meritless.        According to
    Appellant, “[a] seizure justified only by a police-observed traffic violation
    ‘becomes unlawful if it is prolonged beyond the time reasonably required to
    complete th[e] mission’ of issuing a ticket for the violation.” Appellant’s Brief
    at 24-25 (quoting Rodriguez v. United States, 
    575 U.S. 348
     (2015)).
    Appellant stresses that, here, the sole basis for the stop of her car was the
    illegal window tint, yet Trooper Spegar made no attempt to investigate
    whether the tint on her windows was, in fact, illegal during the duration of the
    stop. Accordingly, she concludes that the stop was unlawfully delayed and
    the court should have ordered the evidence suppressed.
    Rodriguez is easily distinguishable from the instant case. There, a K-
    9 police officer, who had his dog in his patrol car, stopped Rodriguez’s vehicle
    for driving on the shoulder of a highway. Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 351. After
    completing his investigation of the traffic violation and issuing Rodriguez a
    ticket, the officer continued to detain Rodriguez while he walked his canine
    around Rodriguez’s vehicle, which ultimately led to the discovery of
    methamphetamine. Id. at 351-52. The United States Supreme Court held
    that because the purpose of the stop had been completed before the dog sniff,
    the officer was required to possess independent reasonable suspicion of
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    criminal activity to justify detaining Rodriguez for the dog sniff to be
    conducted. Id. at 358.
    Here, when Trooper Spegar approached Appellant’s vehicle, he
    immediately observed that she “was extremely nervous,” breathing heavily,
    and her hands were shaking. TCO at 2 (citing N.T. Hearing at 10). He also
    observed signs that Appellant was intoxicated, namely, her pupils were
    constricted, she was speaking very rapidly, and her speech was slurred and
    incoherent. Id. (citing N.T. Hearing at 11). Trooper Spegar testified that,
    [t]hrough his … training and experience with detecting narcotics
    use in drivers, [he] was immediately able to recognize that, based
    on his observations, [Appellant] was exhibiting signs of narcotics
    use…. Trooper Spegar testified that at the time he made contact
    with [Appellant] and immediately observed these signs of
    narcotics use, he was aware that any amount of such substances
    in a person’s system while driving is illegal under Pennsylvania
    law.
    Id. (citing N.T. at 11).
    Based on Trooper Spegar’s testimony, we would conclude that he
    possessed reasonable suspicion, independent from his probable cause for the
    window-tint violation, that Appellant was driving under the influence of
    narcotics. Thus, he was justified in extending the duration of the traffic stop
    to further investigate the DUI offense. Moreover, during the course of the
    stop, Trooper Spegar discovered that Appellant had a history of drug use, a
    prior DUI conviction, her passenger was in possession of heroin, and Appellant
    admitted there were Klonopin pills inside the car for which she did not have a
    prescription. See TCO at 3-4. A search of the car revealed the Klonopin pills,
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    as well as Gabapentin pills.    See id. at 4-5.   We would conclude that the
    totality of these circumstances provided probable cause to arrest Appellant,
    thereby validating the trooper’s detaining her beyond his investigation into
    the illegally-tinted windows.     Accordingly, even had Appellant properly
    preserved this specific challenge to the legality of the stop of her vehicle, we
    would deem it meritless.
    Judgment of sentence affirmed.
    Judge Dubow joins this opinion.
    President Judge Emeritus Stevens files a concurring opinion.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 8/24/2021
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Document Info

Docket Number: 1897 EDA 2020

Judges: Bender

Filed Date: 8/24/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/21/2024